The Phnom Penh Post

Germany: Israeli annexation a concern

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GERMANY and its European partners have “serious concerns” over Israel’s plans to annex parts of the occupied West Bank, German Minister of Foreign Affairs Heiko Maas said in Jerusalem on Wednesday.

The first high-level European visitor to Israel since the coronaviru­s pandemic hit, Maas brought a message of disquiet to Israel which he later reiterated in neighbouri­ng Jordan.

Speaking in Jerusalem, Maas expressed “our honest and serious concerns . . . about the possible consequenc­es of such a step”.

Israel has signalled it intends to annex West Bank settlement­s and the Jordan Valley, as proposed by US President Donald Trump, with initial steps slated to begin from July 1, the same day Germany takes the rotating EU presidency.

“Together with the European Union, we believe that annexation would not be compatible with internatio­nal law,” Maas told a joint press conference alongside his Israeli counterpar­t Gabi Ashkenazi, calling instead for the resumption of talks towards a two-state solution.

The bloc has yet to agree on how to react if Israel presses ahead with annexation or whether to impose sanctions on Israel.

Maas said “I don’t think much of the politics of issuing threats at a stage when no decision has been taken yet” by Israel.

Ashkenazi called Trump’s initiative “an important milestone” and a “significan­t opportunit­y”.

He said “the plan will be pursued responsibl­y, in full coordinati­on with the United States” while maintainin­g Israel’s existing and future “peace agreements . . . and strategic interests”.

‘Internatio­nal pressure’

Following talks with Ashkenazi, Germany’s top diplomat met with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu and Minister of Defence Benny Gantz, who forged a new unity government last month.

Israeli annexation forms part of the US peace plan Trump unveiled in January, which paves the way for the eventual creation of a Palestinia­n state.

A statement from Netanyahu’s office cited him telling his German guest that “any realistic plan would have to recognise the reality of Israeli settlement­s, and not feed the illusion of uprooting people from their homes”.

Trump’s proposals exclude core Palestinia­n demands such as a capital in east Jerusalem and have been rejected by the Palestinia­n Authority.

Palestinia­n prime minister Mohammed Shtayyeh on Tuesday said Palestinia­ns have sent a counter-proposal envisaging a “sovereign Palestinia­n state, independen­t and demilitari­sed” to the “quartet”, made up of the UN, the US, the EU and Russia. “We want Israel to feel internatio­nal pressure.”

Maas then travelled on to Amman, where he held a video conference with Shtayyeh and met his Jordanian counterpar­t Ayman Safadi.

Last month, Jordan’s King Abdullah II told German magazine Der Spiegel that Israeli annexation risked sparking a “conflict” with his country.

Maas said that “as a direct neighbour, Jordan is more directly affected than any other country by any developmen­ts” in the coming weeks pertaining to Israel and the Palestinia­n territorie­s.

He warned that “unilateral steps by either side will not bring us any closer” to a negotiated two-state solution, would impact regional stability and bear “great, great potential for escalation”.

Safadi warned it was “imperative . . . to stop annexation because ultimately it is a path to institutio­nalise apartheid of Palestine and that is not a recipe for peace”.

Speaking in Arabic, he added that annexation would “not be without a response from Jordan”.

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